"I think he will be a good soldier," one NFL
source said Wednesday. "At the end of the year, I think he will
express those concerns to the Jets. He will want to move on."

That has a lot of people running with the "Tebow wants out"
narrative today. But there's one false assumption with Myers'
argument that, when you think about it, draws the entire article
into question.

He won’t make a stink during the season, but if Mark
Sanchez doesn’t provide an opening to play, then I think
Tebow is one-and-done as a Jet. I believe he endorsed the trade
to the Jets rather than his hometown Jaguars because he felt he
would have a better opportunity to get on the field as a
quarterback.

That's not really true.

Despite initial reports that the Broncos let Tebow chose his
trade destination between the Jets and Jaguars, Tebow
himself told reporters, "I didn't have any [say]. The Broncos
had all the power."

So the notion that he chose to come to the Jets via some sort of
endorsement isn't true.

And even if it was true, the idea that he had a better chance to
unseat Jets QB Mark Sanchez than he did Jaguars QB Blaine Gabbert
makes no sense.

Gabbert was terrible in 2011, the Jaguars just fired their coach,
the team was under new ownership, and Tebow would have been a
huge ticket draw in his hometown. Jacksonville was literally the
perfect scenario for Tebow if he was looking to start.

Sanchez, on the other hand, was a multi-year starter who once led
his team to an AFC Championship game.

If he wanted to start, he would have picked Jacksonville over NYC
100 times out of 100.

Look, we've all seen a bunch of shady-looking rumors turn out to
be true. But in this case, Myers' entire narrative is based on a
false assumption — that Tebow came to NY because he thought he
would be a starter, and now he wants to leave because he's not
getting what he bargained for.